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Modeled Shots of My Fair Isle Hat

The wonderful thing about teenage girls is that if you catch them in exactly the right moment (i.e. they want the car keys), they will agree to model your knits for you.  They won't be able to keep the slightly superior expression off of their faces, but at least they will indulge you.

Done1

Done2

Done3

In case you've forgotten, even though I was so in love with this project that I seem to have blogged every day of its on-the-needles life, this is Peerie Flooers by Kate Davies.  I love how it turned out.  It is one of my all time favorite projects.  I'm pretty fond of the model, too.

 

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Starting A Sweater

image from images4-d.ravelrycache.com© Rowan Yarns, 2015

Glacier, one of the new patterns in Rowan 58, was exactly what I had been dreaming of, and from the moment I saw it, I knew I had to knit it.  Even though it's clearly a bit beyond my skill set.  Even though I was going to have to do all of that seaming up at the end.  Even though I fought to get gauge.

I've cast on the back and am working on the ribbing, a pretty standard K3P2.  The instructions suggest you go down two needles sizes for the ribbing, and that is typically really good advice if you don't want ribbing to look like loose strands of noodles (this would be the voice of experience speaking).  But, since I am already knitting a bulky yarn on size 7 needles to get gauge, and since I really like the fabric at this gauge, I decided I would use the same size needles for my ribbing.

Badrib
MISTAKE! Note to self: I am a really loose knitter.  I shouldn't freak out about the fact that I knit on much smaller needles that virtually anyone else in the online knitting universe.  It's what I need to do to get gauge.  Perhaps I am just a very R-E-L-A-X-E-D person and it comes through in my knitting?  But, whatever the reason, my ribbing on size 7 needles is just plain sloppy. 

Goodrib
After ripping out all of the ribbing and starting over on Size 5 needles, here it is. (That's the cover of Rowan 58 beneath it).  Much better.  Not sloppy.  Glad to have made that change, because as it knits up further, I'm finding that it's big.  Hoping there isn't too much positive ease in the size small for me.

Lastsquare
In other knitting news this week, it appears that I'm on track to finish the last square in the infamous, in progress just about forever, Barn Raising quilt.  I am happy and sad.  I think this may be my favorite square of all time, the Koigu yarn is crazy color perfection!

 

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Random Things + Swatching A Cable Pattern

I'm a little bit frustrated with my swatching efforts, so before I get to that, two random things to start your morning.

1. I just discovered the NYT's Only Ice Cream Recipe You'll Ever Need, and it is a keeper!  Even better, they have a chart of the best way to do add ins. I wanted to make basil strawberry ice cream, and it would never have occurred to me to whiz up the sugar and the basil in the Cuisinart before adding it to my custard mixture.  Genius!

Basilsugar

2. I just discovered that my Mom, in her late 70's, is now on Instagram.  How do things like that happen? Will I be this cool when I'm her age? (Probably not.  I'm not that cool now.)

Grandma

3. Swatching.  It's a little bit perplexing to try and count all those mashed in stitches when you are swatching for a cabled pattern.  I do like how my swatch has improved with proper care, though!  Here it is as knit, all scrumbled up together. This is for one of the new sweaters in Rowan 58, Glacier.

Goodswatch

Here it is after blocking, all relaxed and happy.

Divebarswatch

The best I've been able to figure is to put a gauge over the swatch, pin its edges, and then stretch the swatch apart to count stitches.  And, doing this makes me happy, because I am good.  Pattern gauge is 20.5 st = 4' and I'm getting 20 stitches to 4", so I think I can work with that. Row gauge is good as well. True confessions: A lot of the knitters I know are amazing and really good at this stuff.  I'm not, but I'm okay with that.  I'm a working Mom of four.  I give myself permission to do my best and enjoy the process of knitting even when I flame out. But, I adore this yarn (Snug Bulky from The Plucky Knitter) and I have high hopes for this project.  I WANT this sweater.

Swatchgauged

Although I want to knit some on the last square this weekend (and I did sneak in the cast on of a new project I'll show you when it's a little further along late last night), I'm also going to cast on Glacier and get to work on the first piece next week.  I can't wait!

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The Last Square

Forgive me for a moment of self-indulgence, but it's a milestone in my knitting.  I've cast on for the last square in my daughter's Barn Raising Quilt.

Last square

Only a deathly inexperienced knitter would have decided it was a good idea to knit a quilt from sock yarn. Seriously, what was I thinking?

I started knitting this quilt on October 6, 2008.  I know that because of this blog post and really bad photo. It was the week I took my oldest child, now getting ready to start his second year in law school, to look at colleges in New England.  Even then, I seem to have some self-awareness and characterized the idea of knitting a quilt with sock yarn on size 2 needles as a bit "loopy."  Um, yeah.

My intention from the start was that I would knit the squares in between and around other projects.  I wanted to finish in time for my daughter to go off to college, and knew I would need a lot of time for the finishing work — putting all those tiny squares together.  I'm not sure I had a seven-year trajectory in mind, though.  On the plus side, even with the finishing work, the quilt should be done in plenty of time to be a birthday present or graduation gift during her senior year.

As I look back on this project, two things come to mind.  First, I started this project in the early days of Ravelry (I had joined a little more than a year before I started this project, in July of 2007). It was back when I bought books to access patterns.  Larissa Brown's Knitalong, the book that contains this pattern, is a lovely book that is still on my shelf.  I can see it as I type.  But, I rarely use books for patterns anymore.  Ravelry has radically changed my knitting life in so many ways.

Second, as I look over my squares and see how much their quality has improved as time progressed, I'm forced to reflect on how much my knitting has grown in those years.  After learning to knit as a young child and effortlessly knitting some fairly complicated sweaters and blankets as a teenager, I put my needles down when I went off to college and rarely knit until my third child, she who is eagerly awaiting this quilt, received a knitting kit for her fourth or fifth birthday.  I knit it for her, thought it was fun and decided to knit another scarf.  I haven't been without multiple projects on my needles in the decade since then. I've learned a lot in that time (see, Ravelry, supra.)  I never imagined I would knit fair isle, intricate lace, or bold cables.  I never knew the acrylic of my childhood would give way to the most amazing array of cashmere, blue-faced leicester, silk, linen and fantastic merino yarns.

I'm grateful for my knitting years as an adult.  This quilt fills me with a profound sense of happiness and accomplishment — feelings I hope my sweet child will take with her as she goes off to begin her own adult life.  Of course, it may be premature to count my blessings here.  I do still have that last square to finish.

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Really. A Hat.

PeerieAnd just like that!  I have a fair isle hat. 

Peerie Flooers is one of this most enjoyable projects I've ever knit. I'm delighted with the finished hat, which is like a little piece of art.  It fits perfectly and it's beautiful!

I've spent the evening stashing up for stranded knitting.  Because there is no pointing fighting it when you catch a fever like this!  I'm planning a Northport Hat, but also eyeing all of the Rowan 58 Sweaters.

 

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Travel & Knitting

The last two weeks have involved living out of one of these.

Bagpacked
One great thing about traveling a lot is that you learn how to pack.  I can get clothes for a week, plus my yoga mat, in a roll-on-board bag that is sized to to fit overhead on even the smallest airplane. But knitting is a different story.  

After years of trying out different bags, I finally settled on a Longchamp Le Pliage bag that sits on top of my carry on bag and holds an IPad, my purse (I usually take a clutch – a 3.1 Phillip Lim Bag that is the perfect size) and my knitting.  The variable, of course, is the knitting.  I always like to travel with multiple projects in case of emergency (I'm looking at you Jet Blue, and the four hours without water or knitting I once spent on a runway in your care) and this bag is flexible enough to handle that.

The picture above is my knitting bag for the last two weeks of non-stop travel.  In addition to the quilt square you saw in the previous post, I worked on two additional quilt squares and did the cast on for a cashmere shawl I've been meaning to get to for quite awhile.  

I spent most of my time on my Drachenfels Shawl, which finally got to the third color.

Drachenfel

And, my new found love of colorwork is untarnished, if anything I've become addicted.  The Knit Companion iPad program was a wonderful help in keeping the pattern straight.

Peerie

By the end of my flight last night, I was into the decrease rounds.  This hat was intended as a training exercise/swatch, but I'm really happy with how it is turning out.

Fllorr